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Comparative Study
. 2008 Nov;3(6):1812-9.
doi: 10.2215/CJN.05691207. Epub 2008 Jul 23.

Aggressive immunosuppression minimization reduces graft loss following diagnosis of BK virus-associated nephropathy: a comparison of two reduction strategies

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Comparative Study

Aggressive immunosuppression minimization reduces graft loss following diagnosis of BK virus-associated nephropathy: a comparison of two reduction strategies

Andrew S Weiss et al. Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2008 Nov.

Abstract

Background and objectives: BK virus-associated nephropathy (BKVAN) has emerged as a leading cause of kidney graft loss, with no known predictors for graft loss and no consensus regarding treatment other than reduction of immunosuppression.

Design, setting, participants and measurements: A single-center retrospective analysis was performed of all cases of BKVAN from 1999 to 2005 for clinical predictors of graft loss, with evaluation of the impact of immunosuppression withdrawal (3-drug to 2-drug immunosuppression) within the first month versus reduction of immunosuppression.

Results: Of 910 kidney transplants, 35 (3.8%) cases of BKVAN were diagnosed at a median of 15 months after transplant (range, 5.5 to 90 months after transplant), 16 (46%) of which progressed to graft failure at a median of 11 months (range, 2 to 36 months) after diagnosis. Depleting antibody induction was a significant risk factor for graft loss on univariate analysis, whereas early drug withdrawal (<1 mo following diagnosis) protected against graft loss. On multivariate analysis, these findings were independent predictors of graft outcomes. Additionally, when patients were comanaged by referring nephrologists and the transplant center before the diagnosis of BKVAN, the risk of graft loss was 11-fold higher (P = 0.03) than if patients were managed solely by the transplant center.

Conclusions: Increased awareness and early diagnosis of BKVAN, with aggressive tapering of immunosuppression once established, is critical to preserve kidney graft function. Early drug withdrawal to low-dose two-drug therapy maintenance may be preferable to a general reduction of agents.

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Figures

Figure 1.
Figure 1.
Graft failure after diagnosis of BKVAN (n = 35). The 1-year graft survival rate was 72.4%, with a median graft survival of 25 months. A total of 16 of 35 patients ultimately had graft loss with a median time to graft loss of 11 months (range, 2 to 36 months).
Figure 2.
Figure 2.
Immunosuppression withdrawal preserves graft function compared with reduction. The Withdrawal cohort had significantly better graft survival at 1 year compared with the Reduction cohort (1-year graft survival 87.8% versus 56.2%, P = 0.03).

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